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Design and planned analyses of an ongoing randomized trial assessing the preventive effect of Helicobacter pylori eradication on occurrence of new gastric carcinomas after endoscopic resection. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Helicobacter pylori infection is linked to gastric cancer, and eradicating the bacteria post-endoscopic resection may prevent new cancer formation.
  • The study involves patients with early gastric cancer who are either set to undergo or are recovering from endoscopic resection; they are randomly assigned to receive either H. pylori eradication treatment or standard care.
  • Data from 542 enrolled subjects will be analyzed over a three-year period to determine the impact of H. pylori eradication on new or recurring gastric cancer, testing the idea that this infection promotes cancer development.

Article Abstract

Background: A causal relationship between Helicobacter pylori infection and gastric cancer has been established. A nonrandomized study has shown eradication of H. pylori after endoscopic resection (ER) of early gastric cancer inhibits development of new carcinomas.

Subjects And Methods: Eligible subjects are patients with H. pylori infection who are newly diagnosed with early gastric cancer and plan to have ER or who are in the post-resection follow-up phase after ER time of enrollment. Patients are randomly allocated to the eradication or the control arms (no eradication and standard of care). Patients will be evaluated by endoscopy at 0.5, 1, 2, and 3 years after randomization. Diagnosis of a new carcinoma at another site of the stomach is defined as primary endpoint, and recurrence of tumors at the resection site as a secondary endpoint. In addition to intention-to-treat and per-protocol analyses using proportional hazards models, time to recurrence will be compared between treatment and control using multiple logistic regression analyses. In the latter two situations, the models will be adjusted for the factors exerting significant influences on the results.

Results: Five hundred and forty-two subjects have been enrolled into the study and are being followed-up.

Conclusions: This study will have the statistical power to demonstrate whether H. pylori eradication therapy exerts any clinically relevant inhibitory effects on occurrence or recurrence of gastric cancer. In addition, it will be able to test the hypothesis that H. pylori infection is a promoter in gastric carcinogenesis.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1523-5378.2006.00392.xDOI Listing

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